Introduction to Geometrical
Tolerancing for Interpreters
What is it?
An intensive three-day course introducing the
fundamental principles of geometrical tolerancing (to BS 8888 and
relevant ISO standards), specifically for engineers and technicians
who are required to interpret specifications.
This course has the same fundamental content as the standard introductory
course, but approached from an interpreter's point of view.
- Discover how the system of geometrical tolerancing works.
- Find out how to interpret datum markers and
tolerance frames.
- Learn how different types of tolerance control different characteristics, and the
correct way to interpret the different tolerance
characteristics.
Duration
3 days. The three days do not have to
be run consecutively, so the course can be broken down into a number
of smaller units.
Who is it for?
Mechanical and production engineers,
metrologists, technicians and machine operators.
Some familiarity with engineering drawing practice and conventional
dimensioning and tolerancing is required.
What does it cover?
-
what is Geometrical Tolerancing?
-
the benefits of Geometrical Tolerancing
-
features and features-of-size
-
principles
of Dependency & Independency
-
the
elements of Geometrical Tolerancing
- tolerance
frames
- tolerance
features & symbols
- tolerance
frame modifiers
-
reading
the tolerance frame
-
datums
and datum systems
- what
is a datum?
- datum
features
- datum
planes & axes
- datum targets
- reading
datums from drawings
-
basic
dimensions
-
tolerance
characteristics - what they will and won't control
- location
- orientation
- form
- profile
- run-out
-
Worst
case boundaries
-
Virtual
Condition or 'gauge size'
-
Maximum
Material Principle
- bonus tolerances
- Maximum Material Condition (MMC) with zero
tolerances
- Least
Material Condition (LMC)
- using
MMC with datums and datum shift
- restricted
application of tolerances
- combined
tolerances used to control
hole patterns
- standards
- current
BS & ISO standards
- future
developments